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GIRLS* ON ICE CASCADES

Postponed until summer 2025– check back next year!

Explore the North Cascades

Girls on Ice Cascades, our first expedition, first ran in 1999. Each year, the team hikes into the North Cascades to design science experiments, practice art, and learn glacier travel skills. On this expedition, the team camps on a glacier atop a volcano!

Itinerary

Each year the day-to-day details of the expedition change due to weather and glacier conditions. The basic itinerary typically looks like this:

  • Day 1: Meet the team, prepare for the expedition, and camp out at a farm near Marblemount, WA.

  • Day 2: Drive to the vicinity of Mt. Baker and get comfortable with pack and boots by enjoying a short day hike.

  • Day 3: Hike to basecamp at 6000 feet on Mt. Baker and set up home for the week.

  • Days 4-9: Explore the glacier and surrounding environment. Develop and test science experiments, practice art, and learn glacier travel skills!

  • Days 10-11: Hike out and travel to the North Cascades Environmental Learning Center in North Cascades National Park. Wrap up science, art, and reflection activities. Deliver public presentations on science experiments and the experiences of the expedition.

  • Day 12: Enjoy a final morning of activities together before heading home!

 

History

Girls on Ice Cascades is our longest-running expedition, started in 1999 by Erin Pettit while she was a graduate student in glaciology at the University of Washington. Erin founded Girls on Ice Cascades to share her love of science and the outdoors with young women, and continues to serve as a mentor to our participants. Girls on Ice Cascades has run almost every year since 1999, serving over 150 girls!

I’ve heard people describe climbing mountains as feeling like they were on top of the world. Yet when I climbed up that mountain, I never felt smaller. There were so many variable that my team had to control and so many variables that were out of our hands. But the incredible thing was, feeling small didn’t make me feel like I was powerless. I was in a group of people who weren’t afraid to take up space or make their voices heard. And as a team, we were much bigger. I felt like I came back home stronger, both literally and figuratively.
— Mia, Girls on Ice Cascades participant